Molecular and Pathobiology of Canine Mammary Tumour: Defining a Translational Model for Human Breast Cancer

Author:

Oliveira‐Lopes Adália F.1ORCID,Götze Marcelo M.2ORCID,Lopes‐Neto Belarmino E.3ORCID,Guerreiro Denise D.1ORCID,Bustamante‐Filho Ivan Cunha2ORCID,Moura Arlindo Alencar1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Science Federal University of Ceará Fortaleza Brazil

2. Graduate Studies Program in Biotechnology University of Vale do Taquari—Univates Lajeado Brazil

3. School of Veterinary Medicine Ceará State University Fortaleza Brazil

Abstract

ABSTRACTCanine mammary tumours (CMT) have histological, clinicopathological and molecular resemblances to human breast cancer (HBC), positioning them as viable models for studying the human disease. CMT initiation and progression occur spontaneously in immune‐competent animals, which challenge the suggested limitations of genetically modified mice, also enabling the evaluation of immunotherapies in canine patients. Dogs have shorter life expectancy compared to humans, and cancer advances more rapidly in this species. This makes it possible to perform studies about the clinical efficacy of new therapeutic modalities in a much shorter time than in human patients. The identification of biomarkers for tumour subtypes, progression and treatment response paves the way for the development of novel therapeutic and diagnostic approaches. This review addresses the similarities between CMT and HBC and the molecular signatures identified in CMT samples that have been explored to date. We proposed a detailed molecular exploration of the CMT stroma using state‐of‐the‐art methods in transcriptomics and proteomics. Using CMT as an analog for HBC not only helps to understand the complexities of the disease, but also to advance comparative oncology to the next level to prove the claim of dogs as a valid translational model.

Funder

Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico

Publisher

Wiley

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